This post is part of our ongoing series on Medicaid’s new eligibility requirements under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R.1). Here, we examine the nuts and bolts of implementation: how states are rebuilding IT systems, managing data integration, and preparing their workforce to handle an unprecedented compliance workload.
Implementing Medicaid work requirements is, fundamentally, a massive IT and process modernization project. States must modify their eligibility systems to incorporate new functionality: tracking enrollees’ work status, verifying exemptions, triggering notices for noncompliance, and documenting outcomes for federal reporting.
Nearly all states in KFF’s 2025 survey cited major IT system changes as their top implementation challenge. The core system requirements include:
To support these functions, data integration is essential. States aim to reduce the reporting burden on enrollees by verifying work through existing data, e.g., employment wage databases, SNAP and TANF systems, unemployment insurance records, or education data. However, many Medicaid agencies report limited data-sharing infrastructure and legacy systems that hinder such interoperability.
Even states with integrated eligibility systems face challenges. SNAP and TANF work requirements differ in scope and age ranges, making full alignment difficult. Without careful coordination, inconsistent data rules could cause confusion for both clients and caseworkers.
The work requirement project doesn’t exist in isolation. H.R.1 also mandates six-month renewals for expansion enrollees, restricts eligibility for certain immigrants, and limits retroactive coverage, all requiring parallel system changes. Meanwhile, many states are still modernizing eligibility systems or managing post-pandemic redeterminations.
As one state official summarized, Medicaid IT teams are now juggling “multiple, parallel tracks of redesign,” increasing the risk of errors, cost overruns, and schedule slippage. In short, this is the most demanding systems agenda in the program’s history.
Technology is only part of the story. Implementing work requirements will also strain the human infrastructure that supports Medicaid operations. Eligibility workers, call centers, and outreach teams face new administrative tasks and higher case volumes, and many states anticipate needing to hire or retrain staff (or contractor support) in key areas.
Workforce impacts include:
Many Medicaid agencies are already stretched thin. The unwinding of the pandemic continuous coverage provision in 2023–2024 created a massive workload as states redetermined eligibility for millions of enrollees, and some states are still catching up. With work requirements, states worry about staff capacity: not only hiring new people in time, but also not overloading existing employees. States recognize that their staff are balancing other major projects (like new IT system rollouts or policy changes) and adding this could reduce focus and timeliness in other areas. One potential consequence is that if staff have to divert attention to work requirement cases, processing for other Medicaid cases (those not subject to the requirements) could slow down, affecting overall program efficiency and customer service.
Along with reallocating staff and hiring new employees, training will be paramount; eligibility workers must quickly become experts in the new rules, which are more complex than traditional income eligibility criteria. Mistakes in applying the rules (for instance, misclassifying someone as non-compliant when they actually qualify for an exemption) could lead to erroneous coverage denials, which not only harm enrollees but could also expose states to federal penalties if error rates climb.
Many of these challenges point to the need for smarter, more connected systems. Intelligent automation—including AI-driven verification, document capture, and cross-agency data orchestration—can help reduce manual work while maintaining accuracy and accountability.
By ensuring every automated outcome is observable, explainable, and accountable, states can implement these requirements responsibly, protect eligible enrollees, and build a foundation for long-term administrative modernization.
If your agency is facing a “perfect storm” of concurrent Medicaid IT projects, eligibility changes, and new reporting requirements, you do not have to navigate it alone. Leveraging over ten years of hands-on experience supporting CMS eligibility modernization, Infocap helps state and local health agencies translate policy into concrete system requirements, streamline data integrations across programs, and prioritize enhancements that reduce manual work for staff and enrollees alike. Connect with Infocap to discuss how a targeted systems and data assessment can de-risk your Medicaid work requirement build and position your agency for sustainable modernization.